Abstract

Interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) carried by solar wind and rooted at solar corona. Variations of IMF depend on solar surface activities, e.g. sunspots. Moreover, solar magnetic storms are connected by the IMF. IMF parameters, sunspot number, and geomagnetic index for more than 55 years were downloaded from OMNIWeb, which the data were obtained from several spacecraft in geostasionary and L1 Lagrange orbits. Solar cycles are measured in terms of variations in the number of sunspots and their surface areas. Both magnetic events of IMF and sunspots indicate the relation between solar cycles and IMF orientation which is clock angle and cone angle. IMF also interacts with the Earth’s magnetosphere, and it can cause geomagnetic storms. Cone angle and clock angle are derived from IMF components on X-axis, Y-axis, and Z-axis. Their frequency distribution charts on each solar cycle of 20 to 24 and their maxima phase and minima phase are the key points for the analysis. The plot of clock angle to Dst index as a geomagnetic index for each solar cycle was also derived. Based on the analysis, solar cycles are indicated to give an impact on the magnitude of each IMF component. It makes the peak of the charts shifted from the minima phase to the maxima phase. Other than that, the reconnection in magnetopause mostly occurs when the clock angle is between 1400–2520 or when the clock angle directions are southward. But the 23rd solar cycle shows the northward clock angle can also cause extreme geomagnetic storms.

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